Bill Text: AZ HCR2023 | 2021 | Fifty-fifth Legislature 1st Regular | Introduced
Bill Title: Elections; state authority; infringement; opposition
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 37-0)
Status: (Passed) 2021-04-12 - Transmitted to Secretary of State [HCR2023 Detail]
Download: Arizona-2021-HCR2023-Introduced.html
REFERENCE TITLE: elections; state authority; infringement; opposition |
State of Arizona House of Representatives Fifty-fifth Legislature First Regular Session 2021
|
HCR 2023 |
|
Introduced by Representatives Hoffman: Barton, Biasiucci, Blackman, Bolick, Bowers, Burges, Carroll, Chaplik, Cobb, Cook, Dunn, Fillmore, Finchem, Grantham, Griffin, John, Kaiser, Kavanagh, Nguyen, Nutt, Osborne, Parker, Payne, Pingerelli, Roberts, Toma, Weninger, Wilmeth, Senators Barto, Gowan, Leach, Livingston, Pace, Petersen, Rogers, Townsend
|
A CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
DECLARING THE STATE OF ARIZONA'S OPPOSITION TO ANY FEDERAL ACTION INFRINGING ON ARIZONA'S CONSTITUTIONAL POWER TO MANAGE, CONTROL AND ADMINISTER ELECTIONS.
(TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)
Whereas, the Constitution of the United States vests power in the states to manage, control and administer each state's own election laws; and
Whereas, the power over elections was preserved explicitly for the states by the Constitution; and
Whereas, this power was not delegated to the states by the federal government; and
Whereas, rare exceptions in the Constitution, such as the Elections Clause, the Fifteenth Amendment, the Nineteenth Amendment, the Twenty‑fourth Amendment and the Twenty-sixth Amendment, do not extinguish the constitutional presumption that states have the constitutional power to set the terms of administering the election, designating electors and establishing other laws and protocols related to the election; and
Whereas, the Elections Clause of the Constitution was intended to prevent the states from suffocating the existence of the government of the United States, and no such contemplated effort has occurred; and
Whereas, the Elections Clause was to be sparingly used to intrude on state power to manage, control and administer state elections; and
Whereas, House Resolution 1 (H.R. 1), a bill introduced in the United States Congress, would obliterate the constitutional arrangement between the states and the government of the United States by usurping the constitutional power of states to manage, control and administer state elections by prohibiting various practices and mandating others such as forcing states to conduct an election over an extended period of time, prohibiting states from maintaining voter rolls free from error and obsolete information and forcing states to accept an elector who does not register to vote in advance, mandates related to mail voting, prohibitions against regulating ballot harvesting and scores of other intrusions into the power of states to manage, control and administer their elections; and
Whereas, H.R. 1 strikes at the very heart of the arrangement that gave rise to this nation, namely that states are sovereign and free from interference and the intrusion of power from the government of the United States absent clear constitutional authorization.
Therefore
Be it resolved by the House of Representatives of the State of Arizona, the Senate concurring:
1. That the Members of the Legislature oppose any attempt by the federal government to usurp, or otherwise interfere with, the state legislative sovereign authority over the management, control and administration of elections.
2. That the Members of the Legislature oppose H.R. 1 and any subsequent enactment of the terms of this proposal and implore the Members of the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate to oppose the same.
3. That the Secretary of State of the State of Arizona transmit a copy of this Resolution to the President of the United States Senate, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, each Member of Congress from the State of Arizona and each Speaker of the House of Representatives and each President of the Senate of the other state legislatures.